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Ekow Eshun’s curatorial vision will bring together over 30 artists to provide a vital overview of the most exciting art produced in the UK during the past five years, including:
Okiki Akinfe; Alex Margo Arden; Liz Johnson Artur; Alvaro Barrington; Shiraz Bayjoo; Lubna Chowdhary; Shawanda Corbett; Jesse Darling; Ufuoma Essi; Joy Gerrard; Louise Giovanelli; Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hastings; Kudzanai-Violet Hwami; Nnena Kalu; Jasleen Kaur; Christina Kimeze; Julian knxx; Matthew Krishanu; Alastair Mackinven; Melanie Manchot; Lindsey Mendick; Emma McNally; Dala Nasser; Jack O'Brien; Nengi Omuku; Precious Okoyomon; Hannah Perry; Mohammed Sami; Rae-Yen Song; Emma Talbot; Nicole Wermers; Osman Yousefzada.
British Art Show 10: A Chorus of Strangers takes place against a backdrop of heightened anxiety intensified by a divisive political culture, an accelerating climate crisis, and growing public distrust in institutions. In polarising times, the exhibition asks: what forms might empathy or shared imagination take?
At its core, A Chorus of Strangers considers how art can challenge fears of otherness and difference often sparked in periods of uncertainty or change. Rather than framing the outsider or stranger figure as a threat, British Art Show 10 invites a shift towards empathy – moving away from rigid distinctions of “us” and “them” to explore the variety of perspectives that comes from looking through the eyes of others.
Ekow Eshun, Curator of British Art Show 10, says “Across centuries, artists have used their ability to work with uncertainty, contradiction and possibility to create works that privilege affinity over isolation. British Art Show 10 celebrates their unique position while looking ahead to the future. Some works address the social fractures and the environmental fragility of the present, others offer more intimate gestures of kinship. Together, they illuminate art’s ability to cross boundaries: between ourselves and others, the human and the natural world, the past and the futures yet to unfold."
Alex Margo Arden, Accounts, 2025 © the artist. Arts Council Collection, Southbank Centre London.
As the UK’s largest recurring contemporary art exhibition, British Art Show 10 is produced by Hayward Gallery Touring and forms a key part of the Southbank Centre’s 75th anniversary national programme.
Mark Ball, Artistic Director of the Southbank Centre, says: “For 75 years, the Southbank Centre has traced the creative pulse of a changing country through a programme that reflects the times we live in. The landmark tenth British Art Show, travelling to more cities than ever before, continues this legacy, inviting the nation to reconsider today’s major issues through the eyes of the most interesting artists working in Britain. Drawing on the spirit of the 1951 Festival of Britain, where our story began, Ekow Eshun’s concept dares us to imagine a more connected future in divided times. I look forward to seeing these vital conversations unfolding across the UK.”
British Art Show was launched in Sheffield in 1979. Over the past four decades, the exhibition has reached over 2.3 million people, highlighted new trends in contemporary art and reflected a changing Britain.
Returning to Sheffield for the first time since 1985, British Art Show 10 will be presented across multiple venues in the city, including Graves Gallery, Millennium Gallery, Site Gallery and Yorkshire Artspace Persistence Works. Working with Arts Catalyst, venues will develop a vibrant programme of accompanying events and activities.
Kirstie Hamilton, Director of Programmes at Sheffield Museums says: “We’re thrilled that British Art Show returns to Sheffield with a selection of artists whose work speaks so powerfully to our lives today. The city partners very much look forward to welcoming visitors to explore Ekow’s thoughtful, insightful and timely curation and the work it brings together.”
Nengi Omuku, One Particular Man, 2026. All works courtesy of the artist and Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, London.
The exhibition will be organised around three overlapping curatorial themes that span the psychological, sociological and ecological. Each theme is inspired by the work of an influential British writer or theorist who has grappled with the tensions between the Individual and the Other.
British Art Show 10: A Chorus of Strangers will open in Sheffield on 23 October 2027 – more information on the exhibition and the accompanying programme will be announced from autumn 2026.